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Major Community Leader
Dallas Denny Retires,
Closes Several AEGIS Enterprises
By American Educational Gender Information Service, Inc.
Atlanta
March 10, 1998
Dallas Denny, founder and executive director of AEGIS has announced her resignation on March 31 and has announced that several key services will be discontinued.
"The community has had a big freebie for nearly 10
years," Denny said, "and that's my time. I've been spending forty to sixty
hours a week on AEGIS business, uncompensated, in addition to holding down a
full-time job. It's proven impossible to find a replacement Executive
Director under those terms. I suspect it's because no one else is so
foolish. Until we find the funds to hire someone, or can find some other
way to get the work done, we have no choice but to suspend services. We've
also stopped doing referrals and distributing information, and we will be
closing down other services, as well. We hate to do it. We have no choice."
Denny is the third major TG organization head to quit in the last 12 months. Last year, Allison Laing stepped down as executive director of the International Foundation for Gender Education and Phyllis Frye quit as head of the International Conference for Transgender Law and Employment. Frye too indicated that the burden of work after years without any compensation had also extracted a toll.
Denny said that after the distribution of two issues of its newsletter, AEGIS News, and one
issue of its journal, Chrysalis: The Journal of Transgressive Gender
Identities, AEGIS will suspend their publication.
"We should be mailing Chrysalis within the next two weeks," Denny said. "Both issues of AEGIS News are at the printer,
and should also go out shortly. Then that's it. No more Chrysalis, no more
AEGIS News. We will also be closing down our mail order bookstore. We're
selling out the remainder of the stock. We'll continue to sell back issues
of Chrysalis and our Transition Series booklets, but that's it."
Denny said AEGIS will continue to publish the Transgender Treatment
Bulletin, a newsletter for professionals.
AEGIS is currently negotiating with the national transgender rights
organization It's Time, America! about a possible merger. "If the merger
happens," Denny said, we will be evaluating the community's needs and
setting up services accordingly. We may be able to once again do
referrals. But I suspect we've seen the last issue of Chrysalis."
Denny, who was editor of Chrysalis since its inception in 1990, said she had
enjoyed working on the magazine.
"Chrysalis was very popular. It's glossy
appearance set a new standard for transgender publications. We broke lots
of new ground conceptually, as well. We were so far as I know the first to
talk about transsexuals as consumers of services with the right to hire and
fire service providers, rather than victims of some inner calamity who
should be grateful for whatever services doctors choose to give us. We were
also the first to document the problems with the restrictive gender programs
of the 1970s, and were early proponents of the transgender model., while
continuing to advocate for transsexuals. I'm proud of what we accomplished.
But it was a lot of work. I can't say I won't be happy to have the time back."
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